Les candidats postulant à un poste comme Software Engineer chez Amazon attribuent un niveau de difficulté de 3,5 sur 5 (5 étant le niveau de difficulté le plus élevé) à leur expérience d’entretien et sont 50 % à l’évaluer comme positive. À titre de comparaison, la moyenne pour l’ensemble de l’entreprise est de 70,8 % d’avis positifs, d’après les évaluations Glassdoor.
D’après 2 entretiens Glassdoor, les étapes typiques du processus d’entretien d’embauche pour un poste comme Software Engineer chez Amazon incluent :
Entretien téléphonique: 50 %
Test des compétences: 50 %
Voici les rôles les plus recherchés pour les rapports d’entretien -
J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 1 jour. J'ai passé un entretien chez Amazon
Entretien
I was interviewed by several groups, and it wasn't hard.
It was bizarre to hear people referring to themselves as Amazonians, and talking about Bezos as a great leader. I've never heard people from Microsoft, IBM, Intel and even smaller companies talk like that. Sounded creepy to me -- Germany of 1930's...
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
There were lots of "situational" questions, like what do you do if your colleague disagrees with you.
Interviewed for silicon team. Have only been asked about the domain specific knowledge in 1st round and system design in 2nd round and C coding in 3rd round.
The interviews were 50 mins each.
First round with hr screening - 2 leetcode questions then hr manager screening then the loop which consists of 4 interviews each an hour long. The 4 interview questions they asked where three medium leetcode questions. And one system design interview question about how to shadow deploy a test software to millions of users.
The phone screen went longer than expected, focusing heavily on implementation details. The interviewer really grilled me on my approach to a Least Recently Used (LRU) cache, asking how I'd combine a hashmap with a doubly linked list. I felt well-prepared since I had gone through system design examples on PracHub, which made me comfortable discussing eviction policies. The later rounds included more technical questions and behavioral interviews, but in the end, I received an offer, though I ultimately decided to decline. Overall, I’d say the process was average, with solid questions.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Design and implement a Least Recently Used (LRU) cache supporting get(key) and put(key, value) in O(1) average time. Walk through combining a hashmap with a doubly linked list, eviction policy when capacity is exceeded, and how you'd extend it to handle thread-safe concurrent access.